Back-to-back defending champions Hawaii claim Team Silver Medal, Australia, Bronze, France, Copper
Brazilian medalists in five of six divisions highlighted by Gold Medal for Diego Rosa
Clean sweep for Hawaiian women as Becky Benson, Rochelle Ballard and Melanie Bartels are crowned World Champions
Eric Graciet takes first-ever Masters Gold Medal for France, Scott Schindler carries legacy for Australia
Surf City El Salvador – October 24, 2024
A historic Finals Day in the 2024 Surf City El Salvador ISA World Masters Surfing Championship (WMSC) saw Brazil crowned as Masters Team World Champion for the very first time. Another day of incredible surf saw four-to-five foot walls lining the long, right point of El Sunzal. The conditions were ideal to crown World Champions from amongst the world’s best surfers over the age of 40.
A clean sweep for Hawaii in all three women’s divisions placed the back-to-back defending champions in second for the Silver Medal, with two-time champions Australia taking the Bronze Medal and France winning their first-ever Masters Team Medal, the Copper.
Brazil claimed medals in five of the six divisions, topped with a Gold Medal for Diego Rosa in men’s Masters (over 40). Roberta Borges and Jojó de Olivença both won Silver Medals in women’s Kahunas (over 60) and men’s Grand Masters (over 50), respectively, with Andrea Lopes and Jacqueline Silva taking home Bronze in Grand Masters and Masters, respectively.
“World Champion, man, I’m so happy, so stoked to be on the top of the world right now,” Rosa said. “I’m so happy for my team. We’ve been working together for the whole week. Thanks a lot to our confederation back in Brazil too. They were working a lot to bring us here, and we’re representing the best form here.”
Rosa’s powerful backhand topped that of two other strong goofy-footers, Gilbert Brown (CRC) and Hira Teriinatoofa (TAH), the two-time ISA World Surfing Games (WSG) Gold Medalist. Brown put up a strong challenge to Rosa, with a late exchange narrowly leaving the Costa Rican short of his required score, seeing him as the Silver Medalist. Teriinatoofa never quite found his rhythm and finished with Bronze. The sole regular-footer in the Final, Tyrell Johnson (RSA), had been a standout all week, but had to settle for the Copper Medal.